Feb 26 2009

Nintendo Asks For Government Help To Fight Piracy

Nintendo, in its annual report to the USPTO, has requested help in dealing with piracy overseas, both from the US government and from several other countries in particular. China, Korea, Brazil, Mexico, Spain, and Paraguay are listed as the greatest contributing nations to piracy of the company’s products. Nintendo suggests, for example, that “Chinese customs officials must stop shipments of game copiers and other infringing products out of China, and China should work in the coming year to eliminate barriers to its enforcement laws,” and that “the Spanish government implement laws protecting the creative copyright industry and enact laws against Internet piracy.”

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Feb 24 2009

The Chinese (Web Servers) Are Coming

Glyn Moody writes “The February 2009 Netcraft survey is not the usual ‘Apache continues to trounce Microsoft IIS’ story: there’s a new entrant — from China. ‘This majority of this month’s growth is down to the appearance of 20 million Chinese sites served by QZHTTP. This web server is used by QQ to serve millions of Qzone sites beneath the qq.com domain.’ What exactly is this QZHTTP, and what does it all mean for the world of Web servers?”

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Feb 24 2009

First Evidence of Supernovae Found In Ice Cores

KentuckyFC writes “Supernovae in our part of the Milky Way ought to have a significant impact on the atmosphere. In particular, the intense gamma-ray burst would ionize oxygen and nitrogen in the mid to upper atmosphere, increasing the levels of nitrogen oxide there by an order of magnitude or so. Now a team of Japanese researchers has found the first evidence of a supernova’s impact on the atmosphere in an ice core taken from Dome Fuji in Antarctica. The team examined ice that was laid down in the 11th century and found three nitrogen oxide spikes, two of which correspond to well known supernovae: one event in 1006 AD and another in 1054 AD, which was the birth of the Crab Nebula (abstract). Both were widely reported by Chinese and Arabic astronomers at the time. The third spike is unexplained, but the team suggests it may have been caused by a supernova visible only from the southern hemisphere or one that was obscured by interstellar dust.”

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Feb 23 2009

First Evidence of Supernovae Found In Ice Cores

KentuckyFC writes “Supernovae in our part of the Milky Way ought to have a significant impact on the atmosphere. In particular, the intense gamma-ray burst would ionize oxygen and nitrogen in the mid to upper atmosphere, increasing the levels of nitrogen oxide there by an order of magnitude or so. Now a team of Japanese researchers has found the first evidence of a supernova’s impact on the atmosphere in an ice core taken from Dome Fuji in Antarctica. The team examined ice that was laid down in the 11th century and found three nitrogen oxide spikes, two of which correspond to well known supernovae: one event in 1006 AD and another in 1054 AD, which was the birth of the Crab Nebula (abstract). Both were widely reported by Chinese and Arabic astronomers at the time. The third spike is unexplained, but the team suggests it may have been caused by a supernova visible only from the southern hemisphere or one that was obscured by interstellar dust.”

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Feb 23 2009

Chinese Blogger Chosen As Head of Investigation

Lew Perin writes “China hasn’t developed much of a reputation for government transparency. And in Yunnan province, the case of a guy who died in police custody was starting to look like a cover up. But then the provincial government startled everyone by choosing a prominent local blogger to head the official investigation into the death. ‘The unorthodox move to make popular bloggers heads of an investigation committee is a tacit admission by the Yunnan government of the power of the internet – especially blogs – in shaping Chinese public opinion. It also belies the widespread suspicion of the official version of Li’s death.'”

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Feb 23 2009

TECH VIEW Future cloudy for browsers and software – Honolulu Star-Bulletin


Macworld UK

TECH VIEW Future cloudy for browsers and software
Honolulu Star-Bulletin
By John Agsalud In the browser world, a host of competitors to Microsoft's Internet Explorer — most notably Mozilla's Firefox — have been steadily gaining market share.
EU to oblige Microsoft to offer competitors’ browsers EurActiv
Norway mobilizes against IE 6 Register
DigitalJournal.com – ChinaTechNews.com – p2pnet.net – CMSWire
all 23 news articles
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Feb 18 2009

Hackers Jump On Newest IE7 Bug

CWmike writes “Attackers are already exploiting a bug in Internet Explorer 7 that Microsoft patched just last week, security researchers warned today. Although the attacks are currently in “very, very small numbers,” they may be just the forerunner of a larger campaign, said Trend Micro’s Jamz Yaneza. ‘I see this as a proof-of-concept,’ said Yaneza, who noted that the exploit’s payload is extremely straightforward and explained that there has been no attempt to mask it by, say, planting a root kit on the victimized PC at the same time. ‘I wouldn’t be surprised to see this [exploit] show up in one of those Chinese exploit kits,’ he added. The new attack code, which Trend Micro dubbed ‘XML_Dloadr.a,’ arrives in a spam message as a malicious file masquerading as a Microsoft Word document.”

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Feb 15 2009

High Tech Misery In China

theodp writes “Think you’ve got a bad job? Think again. You could be making keyboards for IBM, Microsoft, Dell, Lenovo and HP at Meitai Plastic and Electronics, a Chinese hardware factory. Prompted by the release of High Tech Misery in China by a human-rights group, a self-regulating body set up by tech companies will conduct an audit of working conditions at the factory. In return for take-home pay of 41 cents per hour, workers reportedly sit on hard wooden stools for 12-hour shifts, seven days a week. Overtime is mandatory, with workers being given on average two days off per month. While on the production line, workers are not allowed to raise their hands or heads, are given 1.1 seconds to snap each key into place, and are encouraged to ‘actively monitor each other’ to see if any company rules are being transgressed. They are also monitored by guards. Workers are fined if they break the rules, locked in the factory for four days per week, and sleep in crowded dormitories. Okay, it’s not all bad news — they’re hiring.”

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Feb 10 2009

China Aims To Move Up the Food Chain

krou notes reporting in the Christian Science Monitor that the current economic crisis is helping China’s push into higher-end manufacturing by shaking out low-profit companies. The hope is that, instead of just assembling iPods, Chinese companies will be able to invent the next big thing instead. In this move China is following the well-worn path taken by Japan and the Asian tigers before it. “Last month, the National Development and Reform Commission announced revised plans to transform Guangdong and neighboring Hong Kong and Macau into a ‘significant innovation center’ by 2020. One hundred R&D labs will be set up over the next three years. By 2012, per-capita output in the region should jump 50 percent from 2007, to 80,000 yuan (,700). And by 2020, the study predicts, 30 percent of all industrial output should come from high-tech manufacturing.”

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Jan 28 2009

Chinese Lunar New Year (PICS)

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